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tepid waters do not lie gale is to cyclone as rain to thundercloud no amount of counter-spin will make them anything other than atmospheric unrest El Niño, La Niña how to read the unsettled waters upwelling from the deep what should feed us leaves us starving, weak orcas encircle their kin emaciated mother, tiny calf dying from ocean’s lack while we look on and moan all the power to change if we only cared to own it
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Dec 14, 2016
Dec 14, 2016 at 9:46 AM UTC
The Climate of Denial
tepid waters do not lie gale is to cyclone as rain to thundercloud no amount of counter-spin will make them anything other than atmospheric unrest El Niño, La Niña how to read the unsettled waters upwelling from the deep what should feed us leaves us starving, weak orcas encircle their kin emaciated mother, tiny calf dying from ocean’s lack while we look on and moan all the power to change if we only cared to own it
In the Strait of Juan de Fuca (between Washington state and Vancouver Island, Canada) a resident female orca recently died from what scientists believe to be malnutrition and environmental toxins. Her young male calf likely died as well, he was too young to survive without a mother. The last aerial photos taken of the mother and calf show her emaciated, held afloat by family members. A heartbreaking sight. On the heels of these deaths, there is increasing concern that this resident pod of orcas, numbering about 80 individuals, is declining to the point where it can’t recover.
denel-kessler
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Dec 14, 2016
Dec 14, 2016 at 9:46 AM UTC
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